A Guide to the Virginia Auditor of Public Accounts - Virginia Penitentiary Records, 1798-1869 Virginia Auditor of Public Accounts - Virginia Penitentiary Records, 1798-1869 APA 131

A Guide to the Virginia Auditor of Public Accounts - Virginia Penitentiary Records, 1798-1869

A Collection in
the Library of Virginia
Accession Number APA 131


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Library of Virginia

The Library of Virginia
800 East Broad Street
Richmond, Virginia 23219-8000
USA
Email: archdesk@lva.virginia.gov(Archives)
URL: http://www.lva.virginia.gov/

© 2017 By The Library of Virginia. All Rights Reserved.

Processed by: Renee M. Savits

Repository
The Library of Virginia
Accession Number
APA 131
Title
Virginia Auditor of Public Accounts - Virginia Penitentiary Records, 1798-1869
Extent
4.2 cu. ft. (9 boxes)
Creator
Virginia Auditor of Public Accounts
Language
English

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

There are no restrictions.

Use Restrictions

There are no restrictions.

Preferred Citation

Virginia. Auditor of Public Accounts (1776-1928). Virginia Penitentiary Records, 1798-1869. Accession APA 131. State government records collection, The Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia.

Acquisition Information

Transferred from the Auditor of Public Accounts in 1913.

Biographical Information

On 15 December 1796 the General Assembly approved the purchase of land for the construction of "a gaol and penitentiary house." Thomas Jefferson submitted plans for the institution based on prisons that he had seen in France, but these were not accepted. The General Assembly authorized a design competition and selected Benjamin Henry Latrobe to be the architect. Although inmates first entered the penitentiary in 1800, the structure was not completed until 1804.

In 1823 fire destroyed the interior of the penitentiary. Rebuilding began at once. New buildings were added and a wall was constructed around the perimeter of the facility. In 1833, however, Alexis de Touqueville called the penitentiary "one of the bad prisons of the United States." The physical plant survived the Civil War, although the inmates looted and pillaged it during the Confederate army's evacuation of Richmond on 2-3 April 1865. After the war, new construction began to replace the Latrobe structure, and the last of the old buildings was demolished in 1928.

During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, inmates labored under a contract system and produced goods for sale by private firms. The penitentiary employed a series of agents across the state whose duties included selling the goods manufactured at the penitentiary and providing travel money to discharged inmates. Not all of the manufactured goods from the penitentiary were sold; clothing and household items of penitentiary manufacture were donated to the state mental hospitals at Williamsburg and Staunton.

Scope and Content

Records, 1798-1869, including accounts, correspondence, receipts, vouchers, and warrants of the Virginia Penitentiary submitted to the Auditor of Public Accounts. The collection is arranged chronologically in nine boxes, with oversize materials arranged at the end. The bulk of the records relate to the purchase of food and supplies for prisoners, the building and expansion of the Penitentiary, and the sale of articles built by inmates.

The records include accounts of rations furnished prisoners; invoices of materials purchased for the penitentiary; salaries paid to employees; bills for prisoner medical care; correspondence from Virginia governors ordering cash advances for discharged prisoners for travelling expenses; reports and resolutions from the Board of Directors; and lists of materials produced at the Penitentiary and sent to state mental hospitals. Also included are accounts of goods manufactured at the penitentiary and sold by agents throughout the state. The inmates made a variety of products for sale including shoes, nails, twine, horse collars, coats, and spikes, among others.

Of note are records, 1798-1800, detailing the costs of building the Penitentiary, from purchasing bricks, lime, and planks, to payments to contractors and construction workers. Included are accounts of payments to Benjamin Henry Latrobe for his travel expenses and salary for designing the structure. Also included are records detailing additions and repairs to the Penitentiary as well as the purchase of furniture for the facility.

For additional records please see: Records of the Virginia Penitentiary, 1796-1991 (bulk 1906-1970), LVA Accession 41558.

Arrangement

This collection is arranged chronologically.

Contents List

Box 1 Folder 1 1798 January - May
Box 1 Folder 2 1798 June
Box 1 Folder 3 1798 July
Box 1 Folder 4 1798 November - December
Box 1 Folder 5 1799 January - February
Box 1 Folder 6 1799 March
Box 1 Folder 7 1800, 1806
Box 1 Folder 8 1807
Box 1 Folder 9 1808
Box 2 Folder 1 1809 January - August
Box 2 Folder 2 1809 September
Box 2 Folder 3 1809 September - 1810 February [Warrants 309-405]
Box 2 Folder 4 1809 October
Box 2 Folder 5 1809 November
Box 2 Folder 6 1809 December
Box 2 Folder 7 1810 January
Box 2 Folder 8 1810 February
Box 2 Folder 9 1810 March
Box 2 Folder 10 1810 March - July [Warrants 1-60]
Box 2 Folder 11 1810 April
Box 2 Folder 12 1810 May
Box 2 Folder 13 1810 June
Box 2 Folder 14 1810 July
Box 2 Folder 15 1810 August
Box 3 Folder 1 1810 August - December [Warrants 61-145]
Box 3 Folder 2 1810 September
Box 3 Folder 3 1810 October
Box 3 Folder 4 1810 November
Box 3 Folder 5 1810 December
Box 3 Folder 6 1811 January
Box 3 Folder 7 1811 January - March [Warrants 146-172]
Box 3 Folder 8 1811 February
Box 3 Folder 9 1811 March
Box 3 Folder 10 1811 April
Box 3 Folder 11 1811 May
Box 3 Folder 12 1811 June
Box 3 Folder 13 1811 July
Box 3 Folder 14 1811 August
Box 3 Folder 15 1811 September
Box 3 Folder 16 1811 October
Box 3 Folder 17 1811 November - December
Box 3 Folder 18 1812 January - March
Box 3 Folder 19 1812 April - May
Box 3 Folder 20 1812 June - September
Box 3 Folder 21 1812 October - December
Box 4 Folder 1 1813 - 1816
Box 4 Folder 2 1817 January - July
Box 4 Folder 3 1817 August - December
Box 4 Folder 4 1818 January - May
Box 4 Folder 5 1818 June - September
Box 4 Folder 6 1818 October - December
Box 4 Folder 7 1819 January - February
Box 4 Folder 8 1819 March - April
Box 4 Folder 9 1819 April
Box 5 Folder 1 1819 May - June
Box 5 Folder 2 1819 July - August
Box 5 Folder 3 1819 September - December
Box 5 Folder 4 1820 January - May
Box 5 Folder 5 1820 June - December
Box 5 Folder 6 1821 January - May
Box 5 Folder 7 1821 June - December
Box 5 Folder 8 1822
Box 5 Folder 9 1831 - 1833
Box 5 Folder 10 1834
Box 5 Folder 11 1835
Box 6 Folder 1 1836
Box 6 Folder 2 1837
Box 6 Folder 3 1838
Box 6 Folder 4 1839
Box 6 Folder 5 1840-1843
Box 6 Folder 6 1844-1849
Box 6 Folder 7 1850-1851
Box 6 Folder 8 1862
Box 6 Folder 9 1863 January - March
Box 6 Folder 10 1863 April - June
Box 7 Folder 1 1863 July - September
Box 7 Folder 2 1863 October - December
Box 7 Folder 3 1864 January
Box 7 Folder 4 - 7 1864 February
Box 7 Folder 8 - 9 1864 March
Box 8 Folder 1 1864 April
Box 8 Folder 2 1864 May - November
Box 8 Folder 3 1864 December
Box 8 Folder 4 1865 January
Box 8 Folder 5 1865 January [Warrants]
Box 8 Folder 6 1865 February
Box 8 Folder 7 1865 March
Box 8 Folder 8 1865 April - November, 1869 March
Box 9 Folder 1 1809-1813 [Oversize]
Box 9 Folder 2 1814-1820 [Oversize]
Box 9 Folder 3 1820-1865 [Oversize]